February 1945:
In 1943 a design study was conducted for the follow-on ships of the Ralls class. Hard lessons learned facing Axis air power in the Mediterranian Sea were applied, as were anticipated requirements for shifting Navy assets to Pacific operations. The result was the Taylor class. Two configurations were built, one with a full complement of torpedos and the other with additional 40mm Bofors and a half-complement of torpedos.
All Taylor class ships were completed in the Consolidated yard in Orange, Texas. The lead ship, Taylor, was built with the full torpedo complement and the standard blue paint scheme for Atlantic and Mediterranian operations.
The second ship, Teague, was built with the additional Bofors and given an experimental scheme similar to the US Measure 22.
The Taylors were very similar to the US Sumner and Gearing designs in appearance and armament. They were also the first destroyers built with a dedicated space for a Operations Center or Combat Information Center (as the US called it). Thirteen would be completed before VJ day, and others on the stocks finished at a slower pace following the war. Units not laid down were cancelled and those with incomplete hulls were scrapped.